I feel sorry for Prez Mahama and Ghana - Dr Nduom

Founder of the Progressive People's Party (PPP), Dr Papa Kwesi Nduom says he feels sorry for President John Mahama and Ghana over what he said was the poor state of the economy and the quality of the President's appointees.

In a post shared on his Facebook page today, Dr Nduom described the economy as a "see-saw" one, saying he felt sorry when he heard, over the weekend, the explanations of two key members of President Mahama's administration as to why the cedi was declining against major international currencies.

"...if these are the sort of people influencing what government thinks and does, then I feel sorry for our President and our country," he wrote.

According to Dr Nduom, the economic challenges facing the country have "persisted because people with no real grounding about the economy and business realities keep preventing objective discussion about our problems". "They see everything as part of a propaganda battle between the party in power and opposition parties," he said.

Read the full post below:

I feel sorry for President Mahama and Ghana I really felt sorry for a President John Dramani Mahama and Ghana when I heard two members of his administration and NDC political party on an Accra radio station this past Saturday.

I wondered, "...are we safe?" These two are senior members of the Mahama Administration gave us all ample reasons why we are where we are with a "see-saw" economy and a suffering people.

According to one of them, high rise buildings, mansions for a few, the Pokuase road among others are "good" reasons for the fiscal deficits Ghana is facing and the depreciation of the cedi. With "experts" like these in government, who needs reality?

And if these are the sort of people influencing what government thinks and does, then I feel sorry for our President and our country. When leaders in places like Dubai are promoting prosperity, thinking ahead and promoting in-bound investment, some of our leaders are blaming developers.

The economic crisis we are flirting with has persisted because people with no real grounding about the economy and business realities keep preventing objective discussion about our problems.

They see everything as part of a propaganda battle between the party in power and opposition parties. So everything bad must be painted positive and goats turned into cows so their party does not lose favour with the people.

So we discuss the symptoms but not the real fundamental or underlying problems. The election was in 2012 so we should leave propaganda behind and join hands to solve the problems facing us.

The reality is that the cedi, (re denomination or not) has depreciated consistently over the past 20 years, even as the GDP has grown and without regard to Ghana becoming an oil producing nation.

We all know the reasons why. We import most of what we eat and use.

Then we turn around and export our oil, gold, bauxite, cocoa, cashew, soya, pineapples, banana, timber etc as raw materials. We the people know this fundamental problem so let no one attempt to push blame somewhere else.

The same with telecommunications as it is dominated by foreign interests. Foreign hotel chains get tax incentives and local ones like Coconut Grove Hotels a provider of jobs outside Accra, is constantly denied tax incentives. Coconut Grove has had to construct its own roads, provide water and electricity infrastructure while it collects significant VAT amounts for the government's Treasury.

In Elmina, none of the Municipal Chief Executives PNDC/NDC/NPP has arranged a meeting to discuss the needs of this significant Ghanaian employer or even how to collaborate for local development.

And yet tourism is one of the top earners of foreign exchange for the country.

The point is, we must support our own to grow and prosper as a prerequisite for strengthening the economy. Discussion on such matters must necessarily exclude political propaganda or else our own people will continue to stand still or worse go backwards.

So it is not the high rise buildings or the fancy buildings. It is not "dollarisation" of the economy. Legislation cannot force people not to want dollars, or euros or pounds as someone high up in the administration has suggested.

It is leaving the difficult solutions on the table to engage in win-power-at-all-cost political propaganda that is causing us problems. It is looking for easy solutions where there is none.

When an MP can say from the floor of Parliament that "...the cedi is appreciating the dollar", it is time to ask government ministers and party communicators to go to practical business and economics school, listen to real 'hands-dirty' Ghanaian entrepreneurs to get some facts and gain courage to implement some solutions.

In addition to solving the energy deficit, the President needs ministers and advisors who will ensure that his administration:

1. Rewards those who invest in our towns and villages with road, water, electricity and tax incentives

2. Gives incentives to those who process and add value to our raw materials